harry smith joins us live from new york to tell us about this. harry, i know you've seen a lot of devastation through hurricane coverage, tornadoes, the mississippi overflowing its banks, about ten years ago. is this the end of an era for these people along these coastal towns in jersey? >> boy, you know, around the shop here the last couple of days, i've been saying, this is what i expect, have grown to expect from places like florida, or gulfport, mississippi, or new orleans. this is the kind of weather that seems like it goes with that part of the world. one of the things we learned is that the water in the western atlantic was five degrees above normal. that's part of the interview that went into this storm, that's causing damage that we're still learning about, even today. what my story is for "rock center" tonight, we went into lower manhattan where there's no power, hundreds of thousands of people with no power. it was quite astounding to see people make do. new yorkers are notoriously cranky. sometimes hard to get along with. but when pus